Irina Khalip

19 results arranged by date

New York, July 17, 2013--As a court prepares to review the
case of Belarusian journalist Irina Khalip on Friday, the Committee to Protect
Journalists calls on local authorities to end their persecution of Khalip and
allow her return to a free life.

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New York, February 19, 2013--Belarusian authorities must stop
harassing Irina Khalip and trying to force the prominent Novaya Gazeta reporter into exile, the Committee to Protect
Journalists said in a statement today.

On Monday, Aleksandr Kupchenya, head of the corrections
department of the Minsk City Police Directorate, told Khalip that she should
use the opportunity of her travel ban being temporarily lifted to leave the
country permanently, she told the
Minsk-based Belarusian Association of Journalists (BAJ).

In an unexpected development reported
in the press today, Belarusian authorities temporarily lifted a travel ban
on Irina Khalip, prominent
journalist and reporter for the Moscow-based independent newspaper Novaya Gazeta. The restriction, which
includes a weekly check-in with district police and a requirement to spend
every night in her Minsk apartment, was part of a suspended two-year prison
sentence handed
to Khalip in May 2011 on fabricated charges of mass disorder in connection to
her reporting on presidential elections.

Is Irina Khalip, the prominent Belarusian journalist, free
to travel? President Aleksandr Lukashenko, whose government prosecuted her on
bogus charges of creating mass disorder, says that she is. That Khalip has not,
the president said, shows that she would prefer to be known as a "victim of the
regime." Of course, this all seems strange considering that Khalip's sentence
requires her to be home by 10 p.m. daily.

Approximately 30 journalists are targeted and murdered every
year, and on average, in only three of these crimes are the killers ever brought
to justice. Other attacks on
freedom of expression occur daily: bloggers are threatened, photographers
beaten, writers kidnapped. And in those instances, justice is even more rare.
Today, the Committee to Protect Journalists joins freedom of expression
advocates worldwide in a 23-day campaign
to dismantle one case at a time a culture of impunity
that allows perpetrators to gag journalists, bloggers, photographers and
writers, while keeping the rest of us uninformed.

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New
York, June 26, 2012--Belarusian authorities
should immediately release a critical journalist who was tried, convicted and
sentenced to prison in a single day on a vague charge of hooliganism, the
Committee to Protect Journalists said today. In an unrelated incident, a Belarus
correspondent for the independent Moscow-based newspaper Novaya Gazeta received a threatening package in the mail, the paper
reported.

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New York, June 1, 2011--The Committee to Protect Journalists condemns the deportation of Rodion
Marinichev, a special correspondent for the Moscow-based online broadcaster
Dozhd (The Rain), from Belarus, and the ban on his reentry into the country.
CPJ calls upon Belarusian authorities to remove their sanctions against the journalist.

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New York, May 16, 2011--The Committee to Protect Journalists condemns today's conviction and
sentencing of Irina Khalip, the Minsk-based correspondent for the independent
Russian newspaper Novaya Gazeta, and
calls on Belarusian authorities to acquit her on appeal.

Today, the Zavodskoi District Court in Minsk declared Khalip guilty of "organizing and preparing activities severely disruptive of public order," and gave her a two-year suspended prison term, local and international press reported. The charges stem from her critical reporting on the December 19 protests in Minsk against the rigged presidential vote held the same day.

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New York, May 12, 2011--The Committee to Protect Journalists called today for the Belarusian
government to drop all charges against Irina Khalip, the Minsk-based
correspondent for the independent Russian newspaper Novaya Gazeta,who has
been imprisoned since December.

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It has been four long months since security forces snatched
Irina Khalip, at left, from Minsk's Independence Square while she was reporting on a protest
of the flawed December 19 Belarusian presidential vote.

While Khalip was giving a live account from the square to the Russian radio station Ekho Moskvy, riot police beat her and forcibly drove her away. (Her husband, opposition presidential candidate Andrei Sannikov, was repeatedly struck with clubs and also arrested. He remains imprisoned today.) Khalip was one of at least 20 journalists detained that night, but her treatment has been especially harsh.